Darryl's Web Site
The Following Report Sounds A Lot
Like Murder To Me
"Babies aborted after more than
21 weeks and six days of gestation should have their
hearts stopped by an injection of potassium chloride
before being delivered."
Fifty babies a year are alive after abortion
Times
On Line | Lois
Rogers
Nov
27, 2005
A GOVERNMENT agency is launching an inquiry into doctors
reports that up to 50 babies a year are born alive after
botched National Health Service abortions.
The investigation, by the Confidential Enquiry into
Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH), comes amid growing
unease among clinicians over a legal ambiguity that could
see them being charged with infanticide.
The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists,
which regulates methods of abortion, has also mounted its
own investigation.
Its guidelines say that babies aborted after more than 21
weeks and six days of gestation should have their hearts
stopped by an injection of potassium chloride before
being delivered. In practice, few doctors are willing or
able to perform the delicate procedure.
For the abortion of younger fetuses, labour is induced by
drugs in the expectation that the infant will not survive
the birth process. Guidelines say that doctors should
ensure that the drugs they use prevent such babies being
alive at birth.
In practice, according to Stuart Campbell, former
professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at St George
hospital, London, a number do survive.
They can be born breathing and crying at 19 weeks
gestation, he said. I am not anti-abortion, but as far as
I am concerned this is sub-standard medicine.?
The number of terminations carried out in the 18th week
of pregnancy or later has risen from 5,166 in 1994 to
7,432 last year. Prenatal diagnosis for conditions such
as Downs syndrome is increasing and foetuses with the
condition are routinely aborted, even though many might
be capable of leading fulfilling lives. In the past
decade, doctors skill in saving the lives of premature
babies has improved radically: at least 70%-80% of babies
in their 23rd or 24th week of gestation now survive
long-term.
Abortion on demand is allowed in Britain up to 24 weeks
more than halfway through a normal pregnancy and the
highest legal limit for such terminations in Europe.
France and Germany permit social abortions only up to the
10th and 12th weeks respectively.
Doctors are increasingly uneasy about aborting babies who
could be born alive. If viability is the basis on which
they set the 24-week limit for abortion, then the
simplest answer is to change the law and reduce the upper
limit to 18 weeks, said Campbell, who last year published
a book showing images of foetuses? facial expressions and
walking movements taken with a form of 3-D ultrasound.
The Department of Health was alerted three months ago to
the issue of babies surviving failed terminations. In
August clinicians in Manchester published an analysis of
31 such babies born in northwest England between 1996 and
2001.
If a baby is born alive following a failed abortion and
then dies (because of lack of care), you could
potentially be charged with murder, said Shantala
Vadeyar, a consultant obstetrician at South Manchester
University Hospitals NHS Trust, who led the study.
A systematic investigation of data collected through the
CEMACH indicated that there are at least 50 cases a year
nationwide in which babies survive abortion attempts.
First sight of our data suggests this is happening, said
Shona Golightly, the agencys research director. She said
official confirmation of the figures would be available
next year.
It is not known how many babies who survive attempted
abortions go on to live into adulthood.
Paul Clarke, a neonatal intensive care specialist in
Norwich, has treated a boy born at 24 weeks after three
failed abortion attempts. The mother decided to keep the
child, who is now two years old but is suffering what
doctors call ?significant ongoing medical problems.
The survival of this child was not recorded in any
official statistics, Clarke said. There is nothing at the
moment to force abortion practitioners to account for
their failures.
The issue will be highlighted by Gianna Jessen, 28, who
survived an attempt to abort her. She is to speak at a
parliamentary meeting on December 6 organised by the
Alive and Kicking campaign, which is lobbying for a
reduction of the abortion limit to 18 weeks.
Jessen, a musician from Nashville, Tennessee, was left
with cerebral palsy but is to run in the London marathon
next April to raise funds for fellow sufferers.
If abortion is about womens rights, then what were my
rights she asked.
If people are going to talk about abortion, then its
important for them to know that these are babies that can
be born alive and survive.
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